Luke 20:27-40 · The Resurrection and Marriage
Really!
Luke 20:27-40
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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The ultimate insult kids dish out today is to look down their noses and snort, “Poser!” A “poser” is a “wannabe” who will “never-be.”

A “biker poser” wears a leather jacket, biker boots and drinks coffee from a Harley-Davidson mug, but has never ridden anything more powerful than a John Deere on a Saturday afternoon.

A “rocker-poser” has the tough, trashy tattoos, the black T-shirts, but doesn’t know the difference between a fret and being fretful. 

A “nerd poser” can talk a “geek streak,” has high scores on video games, but can’t write a single line of computer code.

In short, a “poser” talks the talk, but doesn’t “walk the walk.”

In the infancy of Christianity, those first generations of disciples, those first followers of the person of Jesus, engaged in dozens of fierce theological arguments over the basics of Christian faith. One of the most repeated and seemingly reasonable arguments was the assertion made by various groups that the resurrection was “real” yet “not real.” The gist of all these various claims was that Jesus’ appearance on earth, his life and ministry, his death and resurrection, did truly occur. But that Jesus himself only “appeared” to be human during all these events. In reality, from his “birth” through his “death,” Jesus was wholly and fully divine. Jesus, in other words, was never truly human in any essential sense. Jesus was a poser.

Bishop Serapian of Antioch(197-203) named all these various groups who claimed Jesus’ divinity and rejected his humanity as “Docetists.” “Docetism,” in all its diverse forms, was soundly denounced as a heresy by the First Council of Nicea (525 CE). The Docetic heresy asserted that Jesus only seemed to be human, that he only seemed to be walking around in human form. The Docetist claim was that Jesus was actually and always the being of God. As a wholly divine being then Jesus was neither ever truly “born,” nor ever truly “died,” and so was never truly “resurrected.” Resurrection was unnecessary, for the wholly divine Jesus never truly experienced a physical death on the cross.

The Docetists, who revered the divine Jesus, scoffed at the prospect of a truly “human” Jesus as a “poser.” Jesus didn’t have to be “resurrected,” because as a divine being he could not suffer a real death. In the defining rejection of that Docetic declaration, Bishop Ignatius of Antioch offered the Churches official sanction against this “poser” position: 

Jesus Christ, of David’s lineage, of Mary, was really born, ate, drank; was really persecuted under Pontius Pilate; was really crucified and died,” . . . was really raised from the dead. (Letter to Trallians, 9)

“Really!”

“Really!” is a term we are more used to hearing as a snooty exclamation from our kids than as a declaration of Christian faithfulness. But “really” was the soul-shocking assertion of the first generation of Christians – those who really knew Jesus, those who really believed in his messiahship, those who really witnessed him really die on the cross. “Really” was the claim of those disciples who really experienced and really testified to the reality of Jesus’ resurrection from the dead.

The first generation of disciples gave all future generations a stark, simple experience of faith to follow: the reality of Jesus’ life and death and resurrection. All disciples of Jesus serve a real, risen, and ever rising Savior.

Really!

So what does some moldy, oldy, first century theological battle have to do with our faith today? Almost all “heresies” actually came about as attempts to give struggling disciples easier answers.

*It is easier to believe there is a God of light and a God of darkness, a God of spirit and a God of flesh – the church now calls that heresy “Gnosticism.”

*It is easier to believe that Jesus was “good guy” and Yahweh (the “Hebrew God”) was a “bad guy” — the church now calls that heresy “Marcionism.”

*It is easier to believe in a wholly divine being coming down and interacting with us humans — the assertion of Docetism — than to proclaim that God so cared about us that God emptied the divine being to truly take on the frailty of human form to redeem forever our human nature.

Unless we accept that extreme radical love from the divine, a love that offered the utmost of personal sacrifice for another, the resurrection is, indeed, a silly proposition.

Old heresies never die. They just get new lobbyists and better sound bites. “Docetism” was theologically banished by the second century. Yet in the twenty-first century there are a lot of Docestists still hawking their wares and proclaiming their “faith.” Twenty-first century Docetists don’t engage in theological debates. Instead they simply live lives that claim “Christ is risen” yet do not live risen, living-Lord lives.

For those who really have faith in a risen, rising Jesus, the reality of Jesus’ day-to-day, in-the-neighborhood presence, is life-changing. The gospel truth, the resurrection truth, means nothing less than Jesus is as alive in the world today as he was in first century Israel. “Poser’s” think Jesus was a good guy who lived and died two thousand years ago. Disciples know Jesus walks and talks with them, all day, every day, for the length of their days.

The Sadducees rejected the possibility of resurrection because they were strict literalists. The rich territory of oral tradition that gave the Pharisaic tradition its lifeblood beyond the first five books of Torah gave Pharasaic Judaism its energy to engage the world every day. The Sadducees only accepted the written word, with no commentary or questions. Those extreme literalists found no definition of resurrection in the pages of the Torah, and so they rejected it as a possibility. For the Sadducees the only prospect of eternal life was found in the propagation of progeny. The only “eternal life” they could envision was the successful passing on of DNA.

Jesus’ come-back to the silly scenario posed by his Sadduces’ questioners in this week’s gospel text ditches their literalism for the existence of a new reality — the reality of the coming kingdom that challenge men and women to look beyond the limitations of this physical life and invites them to embrace the possibility of a resurrection life, a life lubricated by the Living Water of a risen and rising Lord.

A life that is lived with a conviction and confidence that there is real redemption and real resurrection sees every living individual as a unique person who has been invited to participate in and rejoin the reality of redemption that Jesus’ resurrection has made possible. Docetism denied the possibility of any genuine resurrection. Discipleship wraps its arms about resurrection realities as the greatest possible human hope.

The reality of the resurrection affirms the preciousness of every single person as an original, one-of-a-kind cathedral of clay from the hands of the Divine Potter. Every life is worth “saving” from death. Both of the Genesis creation stories (Genesis 1 and 2) emphasize that human life was created with special divine attention and care. The wholeness of the divine/human connection was created “in the beginning.” The loss of even one human being is the extinguishing of part of the divine spark.Every person Jesus approached he treated as one moving towards a future that transcends his or her present‑‑"it does not yet appear what we shall be" (1Jn3:2). If we are to approach every person we meet as Jesus did, we will see at least three things in every person: 

First, original.

Jesus treated everyone he encountered as a one-of-a-kind, an original piece of divine art. Jesus never saw Samaritans and sinners, tax collectors and tarnished souls, possessed spirits and the pitiful poor. Jesus only ever saw singular creations, unique children, resurrection saints, heaven-sent, heaven-bound angels. Jesus only ever saw uniquely original gifts to this world.

Second, sacramental.

As original creations of God, each human being not only enjoys a precious gift of life from God, but also from birth is blessed with a genuine presence of God in their live. When resurrection-living Christians meet someone new, we know we are always meeting a dual-personality. We are meeting a unique human being, and we are meeting a divine being, the living Christ who is already present and at play within that person’s story. God is always and everywhere “up to something” in the lives of God’s children, of God’s most sacred creation, human beings.

One of the other big theological debates in the early church was about the “real” presence of Christ in the sacrament. Was Christ really present in the bread and wine or was communion merely a commemoration, remembering Christ’s sacrifice for our sake. For resurrection Christians, engaging with any person IS a sacramental act of “real presence.” The presence of Christ is really present in every God-created human being. Resurrection believing Christians interact with every person they meet with one eye peeled for Christ’s “real presence.”

Third, transfigural.

The Sadducees who challenged Jesus were fixated on the literal Torah. They had no sense of God’s ongoing movement in the world. The Sadducees judged everyone and everything according to past events written in the Torah. Status quo was the Sadducees’s mantra. Not surprisingly the whole order of the Sadducees, Temple-oriented, wealth-supported background completely evaporated after the Temple was destroyed in 70 CE.

Instead of being fixated on the past, “resurrection disciples” are open to God’s ongoing participation and presence in the world. In 1 John 3:2 the evangelist notes that, “it does not yet appear what we shall be.” Everyone Jesus personally encountered he approached as someone who was moving towards a transfigured future, not as someone who was trapped in their painful past. The ill are welcomed as those who will be whole. Those who are leading lives laden with shortfalls and shortcomings are beckoned to come and take a new path. Even in his final human encounter, Jesus offers to the unnamed “criminal” on the cross next to him a transfigured place of peace and paradise.

Jesus approached everyone he met Really! as an original sacrament of God with a transfigural future, a future that radically transfigured his or her present straits and straightjackets. Can we greet each and every one we meet as someone real, someone already on a journey to a real, transfigural future? Can we greet everyone as Jesus greets them: with the restored apple of Eden in his eye, and as the original, sacramental, transfigural apple of his eye?

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermon, by Leonard Sweet